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Live-Action Patlabor Films' 1st Full Trailer Posted

The official website for Mamoru Oshii's live-actionThe Next Generation -Patlabor- series and film began streaming the 70-second trailer for the first part on Friday.

Along with the other cast members, Shigeru Chiba narrates the trailer as maintenance crew chief Shigeo Shiba of the Patlabor police robots — the role he played in the earlier anime before reprising it for this live-action project:

Due to the prolonged recession, even the Labor business has experienced a downturn. Then, why is Special Vehicle Division 2 still hanging on? There is history here.

After the glorious first generation, we now have this incompetent third one. But, we still have what we haven't lost.

Everyday life on standby alert, over and over again. Each day of idleness which lasts forever.

However, the situation abruptly breaks down.

Can the incompetent third generation mobilize without a hitch?

Handle the Labors with care.

The Episode 0 "Eikō no Tokusha Nika" (The Glorious Special Vehicle Division 2) prologue will premiere on March 2 on Star Channel, a channel for movies on the BS (Broadcast Satellite) system. In this short which runs about 15 minutes long, Shiba recounts the history of Special Vehicle Section 2 Division 2.

Episode 0 and Episode 1 "Sandaime Shutsudō Seyo" (The Third Generation Mobilizes!) will then play in the Shinjuku Piccadilly and other theaters for two weeks starting on April 5.

The live-action Patlabor project begins with this seven-part series, which is composed of the "episode 0" and 12 full episodes helmed by chief director Mamoru Oshii and other directors:

Part 1: April 5, 2014
Part 2: May 31, 2014
Part 3: July 12, 2014
Part 4: August 30, 2014
Part 5: October 18, 2014
Part 6: November 29, 2014
Part 7: January 1, 2015

Each full episode is projected to be about 48 minutes long. Finally, Oshii is directing and writing a feature-length film that will open during Japan's Golden Week holidays in spring 2015, and it is expected to run about 100 minutes long.

The Next Generation -Patlabor- project is not a remake of the earlier Patlabor anime stories, but a completely new work. The story is set in Tokyo in 2013, and it represents the "third generation" of Patlabor. The Tokyo Metropolitan Police has disbanded its Section 2 Division 1 of police robots, and Section 2 Division 2 barely survived the budget cuts due to the long recession.

The production is budgeted at 2 billion yen (US$20 million), and principal photography ran from June to the end of December. The two life-size Ingram robots were built at the cost of several tens of millions of yen (several hundred thousand US dollars). The production also used Suidobashi Heavy Industry's real-life rideable robot Kuratas.

Oshii commented that the seven-part series will have a "slapstick" ambiance, while the feature film will be serious. Oshii and Kei Yamamura are writing the scripts for the series, and Kenji Kawai is returning to the franchise to compose the music for both the series and the feature film.

The production company Tohokushinsha Film Corporation announced at France's Japan Expo in July that Oshii is involved in this year's live-action project of HEADGEAR's Mobile Police Patlabor anime. Omnibus Japan, an audio and computer graphics studio tied to Tohokushinsha, is co-producing the new project. The company worked on the graphics in Ghost in the Shell and the Evangelion films.

The series' original concept of police officers piloting robotic mecha (patrol labors or "Patlabors") was developed by HEADGEAR, a group consisting of director Oshii (Ghost in the Shell, Sky Crawlers), script writer Kazunori Ito (.hack, Dirty Pair), mecha designer Yutaka Izubuchi (Eureka Seven, Mobile Suit Gundam franchise), character designer Akemi Takada (Kimagure Orange Road, Urusei Yatsura, Fancy Lala), and manga creator Masami Yuuki (Birdy the Mighty). The franchise spawned two original video anime, a television anime series, and three anime films. The last film, Patlabor WXIII, was released in theaters in Japan in 2002.

Central Park Media released the OVAs and television series in English before filing for bankruptcy in 2009. Manga Entertainment, Bandai Visual USA, and Geneon released the three films stateside but are since out of print. The North American licensing company Maiden Japan announced in March that it acquired the Mobile Police Patlabor television anime series. The same company announced the rights for the video anime series last year.

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